The Doki River (土器川 Dokigawa) is a Japanese stream that begins in the town of Mannō (Kagawa Prefecture, Nakatado District) within the Sanuki Mountains and ends in the city of Marugame.

Doki River
Doki River
Map
Native name土器川 (Japanese)
Location
CountryJapan
PrefectureKagawa Prefecture
Physical characteristics
Source 
 • coordinates34°04′55″N 133°58′45″E / 34.082006°N 133.979301°E / 34.082006; 133.979301
MouthSeto Inland Sea
 • coordinates
34°18′24″N 133°47′53″E / 34.306701°N 133.798156°E / 34.306701; 133.798156}
 • elevation
0 m
Length33 km (21 mi)
Basin size127 km2 (49 sq mi)

The Doki river is 33 km long and the catchment area is 127 km2; the population of the catchment is about 39,000.[1]

In the 20th and 21st centuries devastating floods occurred in years 1912, 1954, 1976, 1990 and 2004. The 1954 flood caused the death of 1, 2,180 were injured. In 2004 two levees collapsed, which resulted in the submersion of 75 homes.[2]

It is the only Class A river within Kagawa Prefecture. The river was named after Doki Village (土器村 Dokimura), which is presently known as the Doki vicinity or neighborhood within Marugame. Doki Village was located at the source of the river, and clay from there used to be made into earthenware goods (the Japanese word doki [土器] means "pottery" or "earthenware"). The central portion or the river is called haraikawa (祓川), which is a river in which worshippers purify themselves before praying.[3]

Geography

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The source of the Doki River is located on Mt. Ryuo (town of Mannō, Katsuura vicinity) in the Sanuki Mountains. It flows north along Japan National Route 438 through the Marugame Plain until it reaches both the Northern Doki River and Fujimi Vicinities within Marugame, where it merges into the Seto Inland Sea. At times parts of the river dry up due to the dry climate in Kagawa and a man-made channel modification which shortened the river.

References

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  1. ^ "土器川". 日本の川 (in Japanese). MLIT. Archived from the original on 2021-11-18. Retrieved 2021-11-18.
  2. ^ "土器川の主な災害". 日本の川 (in Japanese). MLIT. Archived from the original on 2021-11-18. Retrieved 2021-11-18.
  3. ^ 『われら土器川探検隊』、建設省四国地方建設局香川工事事務所、企画・発行 (Our Doki River Expedition Team, a children's book published by the Kagawa Construction Office within the Shikoku Construction Bureau, Ministry of Construction)
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This page is partly translated from the existing Japanese Wikipedia article 土器川

34°18′21″N 133°47′55″E / 34.3057°N 133.7987°E / 34.3057; 133.7987